Trillbilly Worker's Party - Episode 346: Tunnel To Al-Andalus (w/ special guest Alexander Aviña)
Episode Date: June 7, 2024This week we're joined by returning guest Alexander Aviña (@Alexander_Avina) to discuss the recent elections in Mexico, as well as Joe Biden and the Democratic Party's border policies. You can find ...our previous episode with Alex, as well as our entire premium catalogue, over at Patreon: www.patreon.com/trillbillyworkersparty
Transcript
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Welcome to the show this week.
We are joined by returning guest, Alexander Avenia,
a historian, professor at, are you at Arizona State, Alex?
Arizona State, yep.
Hell yeah.
Go Sun Devils.
The Sun Devils, yes.
It's really kind of the best mascot.
Yeah.
You know, it's.
Yeah, well you can't really piss off anybody,
so it's good.
Yeah, and also, you associate a devil with the sun. You're not gonna like an angel with the sun, You know you can't really piss off anybody's it's good. Yeah
You associate a double with the Sun you're not gonna like an angel with the Sun is like that's a contradiction in terms
No, what we're gonna find out we're gonna dig a little too far and find out Sun Devils a slur of some kind
Brother it's always it's always the the six degrees of racism man. That's good. That's one of the good ones Brother it's always it's always the the six degrees of racism man. Yeah, that's true
You're never too far from racism Speaking of that I wanted to open this show before we got into actual substantive things
I was doing a little bit of research last night. Do y'all know who the writer robert lewis stevenson was
Yes, didn't he write treasure Island? Treasure Island, yeah.
Treasure Island and Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde.
Yeah, he was big in the 19th century.
I think he might have died the widest death I've ever seen.
He-
Mognum overdose?
You said the widest death, not the widest, but the widest death not the widest but the whitest
The whitest the least melanated death possible
Least melanated death because there's a lot of ways to die white people do crazy shit all the time
So there's a lot of ways to I mean you just set us in the chat of what we got go
I don't know if she was white, but I'm assuming got gored by a buffalo or bison
Can happen anybody I sent you to there was an 83 year old woman who got gored at Yellowstone and then a hundred and
two-year-old man who died on the way to I guess do a reenactment of D-day in
Dodges going places, You know what I mean?
I don't know.
What is this?
Is this like the 80th
anniversary of
D-Day? I think.
I think so.
Snuck up on me this year.
I did see an AI generated post where it showed
the soldiers marching into the sea
and someone's like wrong way lads
AI wins again, I guess
What they I saw like they were doing recreation like they were doing so in the south you get like Civil War
reenactors all the time, but like they were doing
Civil War reenactors all the time, but like they were doing World War two reenactments And so they had that sounds horrible. They actually are they had British paratroopers
Dropping into Normandy and they had like French customs officials waiting there so that they could like stamp their passports
Cuz of Brexit
That's why yeah
Shit um oh Robert Louis Stevenson though. I have to point this out real quick
I think he might have died the most Anglo death possible. He was
in the middle of making mayonnaise
in the
In the Samoan Islands. He was in the Samoan Islands.
He was in the Samoan Islands on a research trip,
like a colonial research trip, and he was making mayonnaise
among the Samoans when he suffered a fatal stroke.
So I don't know.
That's pretty- I mean, I didn't know the mayo meme went that far back. You know. I mean, like, I mean, I didn't know. I didn't know, like the male mean went that far back.
You know what I mean?
Like, I thought that was like a recent development, but I guess like Robert
Louis Stevenson is pioneering, you know, the.
I love that I'm secretly like mildly offended at the Mayo jokes.
Yeah, I tell you another effect because I'm just like,
I don't really eat that much man. I do. I love. Hey, I'm you another effect because I'm just like
I'm not trying to front. I do like mayo. I'm not trying to front man I just remember I just remember being like a kid man and going to what you know, some of my white friends houses
You know being like yo what you got in the pantry is if they were gonna have just just filled with mayo
nothing else but mayonnaise
mayonnaise pop tarts.
I think I remember going over,
so I live in Mexico from like the age of like four
till seven, something like that.
And when we came back to the US,
I remember my first time ever going over
to like a white friend's house and it's time for lunch.
And the mom gave me the sandwich on white bread. So I'm
already confused. And it ended up being like, it was like a tuna sandwich with an immense
amount of mayo. Like, it traumatized me to this very day. I had to eat it.
Like the tuna swimming in mayo.
Oh my god, it was so awful. But like, I was like, I got to eat it. I have to be polite.
Like you got to eat it. And it took me a good 10 years to kind of work that out of my god, it was so awful. But like I was like I gotta eat it have to be polite like you gotta
And it took me a good ten years to kind of work that out of my system I can appreciate Mayo now, but it took me a long time. Yeah
It's like your first beer. It's like you're like
But then you come to love it. Well, I mean it's like it's like it's like a ritualistic thing
You know when the white when you come to the white man's home
and he offers you mail is disrespectful to not.
That's the side of his respect for it.
It's a side of disrespect.
Robert Louis Stevenson took Mayo to the Samoans.
He was like, I'm going to show you.
Let me show you guys a little culture.
Oh, my God.
They suffered a massive stroke.
Oh, man.
Maybe not unrelated to the Mayo Consumption.
Yeah, right.
I'm going to use this when I teach like the conquest, I always make sure to tell students
like how these conquistadors died because so many of them suffered like terrible, but
sometimes funny deaths.
Like one guy who I think he was Cortez's second in command died when he
was on his horse trying to put down an indigenous rebellion and he fell off the horse and the
horse fell on top of him and crushed him to death. Or the guy who was credited with so-called
discovering Chile. One story is that he was captured by the Mapuches and was forced to
drink molten gold. And that's how we got I really hope, which is one of the best.
Like, I really hope that happened.
Yeah, Alex didn't didn't Christopher Columbus,
didn't he die broke and marooned or something on Jamaica?
You know, any incredible pain?
I forget what disease it was.
He was definitely broke, right?
Because he was a criminal.
He got sent back to Spain and chains
when the king and queen found out that he had been lying and he was a man because of slavery and all other stuff
But yeah, that is so emblematic. It's Columbus was not only like, you know
What Howard's in you know, like the genocide in?
Enslaving monster, but he just also was fundamentally just a grifter. He was just like a con man
He was just like give me money. He was just like, give me money, I'll do your job.
No, and like so much of what Americans know about Columbus
is from 19th century US myth making, right?
Related to Italian immigrants to the US, right?
So that's why we get things like that Sopranos episode,
which is like.
Yeah.
It's anti-discrimination.
It's anti, but it's so, what Americans think most Americans think they know about
Columbus comes from like the late 19th century US myth making, not like, you know, actual
grounded historical research.
He was the total grifter.
But he's also like a sailor.
He had that skill, right?
Like he had sailed for under various flags and he benefited from Arab and Jewish technology
that had been created in the Iberian Peninsula.
Right. It was Alan Dallus.
Right. But yeah, didn't wasn't that like as a side tangent, didn't like an Israeli
politician recently, like when Spain said they were going to recognize Palestine, they
were like, this is just like the Inquisition. Like he said, he said it was just like Al-Andalus.
And it's like, bro, that was like the golden age of culture in
Iberia. Like it was the Christian kingdoms who expelled you guys in
1492. Right. Al-Andalus, right? Yeah. Yeah. Yeah, that's that was
nuts. Yeah. That that in like the moment, that moment was pretty funny online.
The other recent one related to Mexico is people
saying that the current president-elect of Mexico, Kalei Ashenbaum, is not
Jewish because she thanked Jesus.
It turns out that her husband's name is his.
I will. I'm going to laugh about this for a really long time.
But that was so good. It's like a broader like it's like a metaphor I will I'm gonna laugh about this for a really long time
Like a broader like it's like a metaphor for like American misunderstanding of Mexico, I think it really is in general Yeah, it's what I think the guy that said that he was like the executive director of like Democratic majority for Israel or something
Yeah, I'm back spin-off. Yeah. Yeah, just
incredible Well, let's maybe it's a good place to start actually Alex Israel or something. Yeah, backspin off. Yeah. Yeah, just incredible
Well, let's maybe it's a good place to start actually Alex
We wanted to have to have you on to talk about several things that are currently going on in
the border region of the United States and also our neighbor to the south
As you were saying before we just got on every six years
Mexico gets to slot in as the topic du jour
And that is certainly the case right on cue right on cue
There's recently been elections held in Mexico. There's also recently elections held in India
And we can maybe even kind of compare the the reactions to those two elections here in America
But there's there's some elections that just happened in Mexico and there has been predictably an outcry
Against them I guess you could say so I guess like maybe maybe the best place to start is like who is this new person?
coming in to replace Amlo and
And and why was her victory such an overwhelming?
landslide even though like all the polls had
Basically losing it was like it's too. It's too much democracy in Mexico. That's the
Much yeah, it is interesting like so it is interesting to see this moment every six years from the US side, because in between those six years, we usually get that sepia filter movie filter, right, that about drugs and violence and the way that Americans tend to see Mexico is very restricted, right? It's very limited to certain topics. If it's not a beach resort, then it has something to do with drugs and violence and migrants, right?
So, yeah, so there's too much democracy in Mexico.
This president-elect, Claudia Sheinbaum, won last Sunday.
I think she's at 60%, I think 61% of the vote.
Her nearest rival, Xochitl Galvez, kind of the candidate for this freak political coalition
of former rivals that all just got together because they had nothing else, no other chance to win.
She finished with under 30%. So this is like a blowout. This is a bigger blowout than what
Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador won in 2018. Claudia Schoenbaum is an environmental scientist. She was part of a Nobel Prize winning
climate study from a few years ago. Before she ran for president, she was the mayor of
Mexico City. And she had interesting record as mayor of Mexico City that we can get into
if you guys want. Before that, she was the mayor of a borough in Mexico City. In the 80s and early 90s she was a student activist, you know, standing
up to the PRI, the political party that ruled Mexico from the 20s up until the year 2000.
And she's been a, you know, she worked for Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador when he was
mayor of Mexico City in the early 2000s. She was a secretary of the environment.
I can't remember exactly what her title was.
So she's been a part of Lopez Obrador's political career
for a long time, right?
But she's also surprising to a lot of journalists
that I've read in the US.
She's her own person, right?
She has her own talents.
She's very, she's brilliant, right?
In terms of what she does, she's a good politician. She did some really interesting things when she was mayor of Mexico City.
I think a lot of the reporting, particularly in the English speaking world, tends to reduce her
to some sort of acolyte or appendage of Lopez Obrador, wherein, which I think is kind of like
a message, misogynistic, right? She's not like a duplicate copy or servant or whatever of López Obrador.
And there was the congressional elections, it was also overwhelming in the lower,
Mexico has a two house, a two tiered congressional system, so they have their version of the House
of Representatives, Morena, the party that that Lopez Obrador
and Claudia Sheenbun belonged to, they won them and their two other political parties
that that form part of the coalition won a supermajority. In the Senate, they they're
within like four or five seats of that supermajority. They didn't get quite get it. But they're
probably gonna be able to pick off a senator here or there from the political opposition to be able to push through pretty
ambitious political program that both AMLO presented last year and then Shane Baum modified
it and presented it as her own political platform.
Part of AMLO's political coalition is a labor party, a long existing labor party called
the Partido del Trabajo and this really shady like a green party.
Like if there's one really bizarre political party,
like if you really wanna do a deep dive
into like Mexican politics to find like the freaks,
go read about the green party.
Like this political party,
like I think was started in the late 90s
by like rich Mexicans who were concerned
about the environment, but they've been really good. They're like Ramuras, like they're really good at attaching themselves to whatever political
party has the power. And they're just totally like, just they're attracted to power. That's
their ideology. And they'll just sell themselves out to whoever is in power. They're really
problematic. There's some really problematic individuals within that party. But they've been a loyal member of the Morena coalition and they unbelievably are going
to be one of the more powerful political forces, at least in Congress, which is really frightening
to me.
How problematic we talking now.
It looks like they're getting some birth rates frequently or population control.
No, no, no.
They're not that bad.
I mean, they're not like American Greens.
No, no, no, not necessarily.
No, but they're just individuals within that party who are pretty problematic.
Like one guy can remember his name, but he at one point was the mayor of Chiapas and
Chiapas is a heavily indigenous state in southern Mexico. This dude is the whitest Mexican you're ever going to see,
right? And you're like automatic. You're like, wait a minute, what is going on here? Like,
yes, something suspicious going on. And then he would go and dress up. Like he would go to
communities and they would, he would like dress up in indigenous garb and like, and I think he was
the one who was married to like a famous telenovela star.
It was, or yeah, it's really bizarre.
It's a really bizarre party that is, yeah, started by wealthy people who wanted to do
weird environmental stuff and now they just attach themselves to whichever political coalition
is in the ascendancy.
What are some of the, this is a side tangent kind of, what are some of the environmental
issues facing Mexico? What are some of the this is a side tangent kind of like what are some of the environmental issues?
Facing Mexico cuz like I mean it is an oil
I mean there is oil there
But I don't think as much as there once was right and then I think I saw something the other day that like Mexico City is
On the verge of running out of water soon. Yeah, that's it's pretty apocalyptic
I mean, I think they said the estimate is that Mexico City is gonna run out of water
By like June 26 if they don't get rain.
Mexico's been, Mexico's been suffering a pretty horrific drought for years now.
And in the last two to three weeks, they've had this crazy heat dome that like won't leave.
So like you have instances of like howler monkeys in southern Mexico like dropping dead
because it's too hot. Mexico City.
So famously was a city built on top of a lake and the Spanish conquistadors and all their wisdom decided to drain most of it.
And then the rulers in late 19th century Mexico decided to like drain even more of it.
So Mexico City has.
No, no, I just it's just it's just so interesting how this like,
I guess, environmental racism, for lack of a better word, like it's not like people use it as if it's a newly developed term or concept.
But this goes back like so far.
I mean, this is endemic to the history of this country, right?
To settler colonialism, to racism, genocide, you know, all of that, man.
Listen, Aaron, you would drain the lake too if you had to build, dude.
You can't build on water.
You can't build on water.
Well, well, the Mexica or the Aztecs built a city of 200,000 people that floated on water.
Well, I take that back.
So you can not those guys, though, not those guys.
Yeah, yeah. Yeah. So it there's it gets a lot of its water from underground aquifers that are starting to run dry and
it also has to import water from reservoirs outside of the valley of Mexico is like 7,000
to 8,000 feet up in the air, right?
If you've ever been to Mexico City, greatest city in the world, I love it.
If I got paid in dollars and lived there, that's where I would be right now, despite
the horrific earthquakes.
So they have the infrastructure that has been used for decades to bring water from outside
of the valley is terrible.
It's not working, it's breaking down, and the reservoirs that it used to draw water
from are practically empty.
So I would say this, when people say like Mexico City is going to run out of water by
the end of June, certain parts of Mexico City is going to run out of water by the end of June, it's certain parts of Mexico City are going to run out of water.
And it's going to be the working class boroughs that are going to be the ones running out
of water and the wealthier neighborhoods in the West and the Northwest, they'll continue
to get water or they'll just have trucks bringing water to them.
I want to talk a little bit about this article in the Atlantic I've mentioned to you and I know you've read it
but
Reading it myself. I was kind of astonished at the
the tone
Generally, I've just been sort of astonished at the tone
towards Mexico in the last I
astonished at the tone towards Mexico in the last I
don't know obviously in the last like since I've been alive right like since
You know since I've been alive like since the 90s since the 2000s
but definitely in the last year as this has all been bundled together with what's going on in Israel and in Ukraine the
The tone towards Mexico has become definitely more
How shall I say like maybe pugilistic like definitely more aggressive?
definitely more like They are out of control over there and someone needs to intervene
The article I'm talking about is in the Atlantic. It was written by David Frum, never Trumper, David Frum, who, you know,
coined the Axis of Evil speech.
Strap in, boys.
Going to the rubber room.
David Frum writes,
President Joe Biden's next big foreign policy crisis
was waiting for him at his desk this morning,
a southern neighbor heading fast
towards authoritarianism and instability. this is a this is this is written after a presidential election in
which the winner won by a massive landslide and her predecessor also won
by a massive landslide and one party ruled for 70 years in an authoritarian like
arrangement the pre so like yeah, that's like I love people like you would call it go job as a dictator and so he's
democratically elected I don't know
I mean also to you know in America here
We have two geriatric candidates that nobody wants
You know you know what I mean, and that we're being forced to vote and that's called democracy
I I read this article just again as a side tangent
There's an of fucking incredible article in Harper's called Masters of War by Thomas Meany where he went to the Munich conference this year, which is basically like a trade show for like all the various like
Atlantis is military diplomats and leaders. And at the very end, it has a very funny image
of JD Vance standing next to a Michael Jackson statue and like Scandinavian journalists calling him the Antichrist and
But like
On this image of like an Applebaum being at yada, you know who an Applebaum is she writes for the Atlantic?
Fortunately, yeah
Yeah, do you know who an Applebaum is she writes for the Atlantic? Unfortunately, yeah, yeah like she was
Talking to a diplomat. Let's see if I can find his name. She was talking to a diplomat
Anton Hoff writer who said that like
Europe could soon face three autocracies Russia China in the United States and it like totally fucked up an Applebaum
She like she was like oh my god
You're so right like America is also heading for like authoritarianism
But like any time like you frame it that way
It's like you'd never get like David from and those people to see it that way
You know what I'm saying like they they see it like us as a selective
Authoritarianism when one guy's in office that they don't like, I know, I'm preaching to the choir here,
but it is just an interesting thing
that made me think of that.
Also usually gets applied to certain,
the swarthy folks of the world too, right?
Right, exactly, exactly.
So it's a selective application
of who's authoritarian, who's democratic.
I mean, yeah, and I, David Fromm, man,
like I'm obviously I'm abolished ice abolished Border Patrol
But if there's one person I want deported like from the US is David from
Deported into the sea brother
Where we're deporting him to the primordial ooze
He's increasingly been, like in the last maybe three years, maybe even back to the
beginning of the AMLO administration, 2018, 2019, like he's been writing a series of articles
about Mexico.
He's obsessed.
And about AMLO.
He is.
And it's, there's one article that he wrote where he actually talked about who his quote
unquote Mexican sources are, and they're the members of the political and media opposition in Mexico right
now just losing their fucking minds.
Like they are, they've had a terrible last three, four days.
And I've been loving watching it.
Like I wish there's one, I think they're just like an online TV station called Atypical
TV.
And it's just basically like the richest people in Mexico who gripe about the country.
It's like the most effective exercise in like consciousness rate awareness raising.
Like if you set like a working class person, tell them to watch these rich people bitch
about Mexican democracy is going to radicalize the whole country.
Yeah, the teens are are gonna come out.
But David Fromm, yeah, he's got this,
it's just, I don't know how to describe it. One, like in this article that you referenced, Terrence,
like he gets basic, like historical facts wrong.
Like he talks about the Mexican Revolution of 1913.
I'm like, bro, just Google it.
Like, it's not that hard.
It's 1910, not 1913.
But it's, yeah, it's how to frame too much democracy
as authoritarianism and how to scare gringos
into thinking that they have
an autocratic authoritarian government
that's on the march south of the border.
So on the one hand, I'm kind of,
I'm glad that he's writing about it
because we actually need more attention in the US when it comes to Mexico and Latin America in general, like I think.
But the way he does it is pretty awful. And it's kind of it's trying to forward
a certain political agenda that is anti democratic that is authoritarian on its own terms, right?
Because what he's doing is denying the democratic will of the masses who overwhelmingly have elected two members of the same political party, Morena, since 2018. But there's also a
brought like a longer thing where, you know, I will say it, every like bold, progressive, radical
leftist idea that we've seen in the last, let's say since the beginning of the 20th century, since
the Mexican Revolution 1910, has not come from the U. man, it's come from Mexico and it's come from Latin
America.
Right.
Mexico had its first elected black president in like 1824.
Holy shit.
Like, in the like, come on, man, it's not even close.
And now Mexico has his first elected woman president and first Jewish person president.
Right.
Like, so, but the American policy elites and so-called intellectuals see it in reverse,
right? Because of American exceptionalism, they say that the opposite, everything good,
everything quote unquote advanced, everything progressive, actually comes out of the U.S.
and then it's supposed to be spread and emanated to the people who need it. When in actuality,
if you actually know your history, it's the other way around.
And Mexico is one of these case studies. And I think it's, you know, I think, I guess,
one of my missions, I guess, as a historian of Mexico and a person of Mexican descent is to to push that line, right? Like we have to understand this country that we share a 2000 mile
border with in a way other than authoritarianism,
other than drugs, other than narcos, other than spring break.
Because it's the single most important geopolitical issue of the US in the sense that what happens
in Mexico has a very immediate, direct impact on the United States.
This is what happens when your sources on Mexico are two native-born sons, George Romney
and Brett Stevens.
Louis CK is the third.
I was Louis CK.
I think he is also Mexican-born.
There's also an editor of the Wall Street Journal, David Ludnow, who says he was, he's in his Twitter bio, it's like the opposite of a Chicano,
a gringo born in Mexico, born and raised in Mexico, who wants who became famous on Twitter
because he was complaining that Amuro was increasing taxes and the violence was increasing
on his second vacation home in Mexico.
Wall Street Journal editor who works in Mexico and complains that his vacation home is
Being attacked and taxed by the poor's I love it. It's perfect
Well, you know, that's that's one of the greatest affronts on democracy ever, you know and freedom, you know
When the vacation home is threatened when you're having your vocation vacation, but that's it. Yeah
Yeah, well, I want to talk about some of the stuff that from like levels at
Amlo and about Shane Baum in this article, I mean
Part of it. I mean he talks about like Omlo's record and we can talk about that because like I do want to know partially
What it is that has made Marina so like popular right like it has made shine mom Shane bomb such an attractive candidate
It's it's obvious that it's these progressive reforms
that people like David Frum would hate.
But why is it also being packaged with this scare,
this specter of the cartels and the violence?
Because David Frum doesn't give a fuck about the violence.
He talks about murder rates in Mexico,
and it's like, and compared to America, it's like, dude, you don't give a fuck about like the he talks about like murder rates in Mexico and it's like doesn't care and compared to like America it's like dude you don't give a
fuck so like do you really think they believe that shit that like I read that
Osvaldo's a follow book about you know about drug cartels do not exist and
it's basically it's kind of a fiction of the American imagination do you guys
think that they that a guy like David from is just pushing that or do you
think he's like a true believer that drug cartels exist as they're constituted in Breaking Bad and
shit like that?
He's got to.
Probably.
He's probably got to.
I mean, has this motherfucker even been to Mexico?
You know?
He goes to a very particular part of Mexico City.
He goes to Polanco, which is like a very ritzy part.
And he goes to. Yeah.
And he goes to the homes and of wealthy media figures and politicians,
opposition politicians.
That's what he talks to. Right.
He's not he's not even doing like the Thomas Friedman,
like getting in a taxicab talking to the driver.
That would be exactly exactly.
Imagine David from I would love to imagine David from in the Metro.
So Mexico City has this amazing Metro system, right?
Like, I don't know, five million people a day use it.
Like, it's an amazing, it's subsidized, it's cheap, everyone can afford it.
It's got to be updated and modernized, but it's still like a very effective way of getting
yourself around, particularly with like the horrible traffic that characterizes the city.
I would love for David Fromm to spend a day
in the Mexico City Metro
and just riding around talking to people.
Just, yeah, with pen and paper, just like,
on the beat, man. Yeah, I would love it.
He'd be so scared, he'd be scared.
He would be scared. Oh my God, he'd be, yeah.
What is, like, what, I don't know how to answer this question
because maybe it's packed into,
maybe there's two ways to split this off.
Why is he so obsessed with seeing Mexico in this very specific way? And like maybe a separate
question is like how should we see it? Like why there is obvious violence here, right? Like there
is obvious like covert ops going on. There is like what you would consider some trafficking
cartel activity going on, probably not in
the way that like the Western imagination conceptualizes, but like how should we view
it as opposed to like a guy like from views it?
I mean, Mexico has the fortune and the of sharing a 2000 mile long border with the world's
biggest narco state and the world's biggest arms state.
I mean, I think, you know, this is one of the, if we start with the issue of like security, which was a huge issue in this election, right? I mean, Mexico has a national,
right now it has a national homicide rate of like 23 to 25 per 100,000. It's during Amlo's six-year tenure had over 160,000 homicides, which is insane,
right? It's insane. He did manage to, it's over 30,000 homicides a year. Now his predecessor,
I think 2017, 2018 might've been the highest. It was like 35 or between 35 and 37,000 homicides in one
year. And I think halfway through Amlo's administration, it started to come down a little bit, but
it's still above 30,000. It's a real issue. Like it's also localized in certain spaces,
right? Like it's not the entire country. The entire country is not a failed state. Like
from seeing, and a lot of people in the U S seem to explicitly or implicitly say it's not a narco state.
You don't have narcos controlling the Mexican state. But that violence is localized in certain
hotspots and it's horrible, man. And it's being driven by drug trafficking organizations that
began as moving weight into the United States because there's massive amounts of demand.
And this has been the case for more than a hundred years like you have
direct, I mean I I have a found a record from like
1809 of a Spanish colonial militia officer in Oaxaca who got busted for bringing an opium from from China or from India
right this this issue of narco trafficking has existed for a long time and
Particularly in relation to the US and Mexico since the early 20th century, it responds to US demand for these
drugs and we see cycles of it, right?
It'll be marijuana.
Marijuana got legalized, right?
So there's no more market for that.
So then it was meth and then heroin has gone through, I don't know how many cycles at this
point.
And then the emergence of synthetic opioids essentially ended the livelihoods of opium farmers
in Mexico beginning 2016, 2017.
And that's the biggest issue now.
It's fentanyl, right?
But then they've also diversified their activities, right?
So they're not just drug trafficking organizations.
Now they control human smuggling.
Now they control contraband, like copyright illegally, you know know contraband that violates like copyright infringement
It's like like DVDs movies all that right?
City Marvel movie or some shit like that
Yeah, you can get you can get anything that's in the theater in Mexico City like on the street real cheap men
That was the way I used to watch movies when I lived there, but
That was the way I used to watch movies when I lived there. But yeah, season 11.
So and part of it in these groups in certain aspects have fragmented and become even more
dangerous to deal with because for a long time, the strategy, the bi-national strategy
between the US and Mexico was to go after the kingpins, right?
But when you take out a kingpin, that just creates a power struggle within a particular
organization. And many times those organizations will then split and then go their separate ways,
but they're still going to fight for the same smuggling routes or the same drug producing
routes or the same ports or the same drug markets within Mexico. So this drug, this approach to,
militarized approach to drugs that Mexico and the US
have followed for decades creates more violence.
Particularly when they're able to turn certain kingpence
to snitch on their former rivals,
within that creates levels of distrust and hatred
and acts of revenge that then also heighten the violence.
So that's a very real issue.
It's not something that's made up by Netflix.
But again, we cannot just view it in a national context
that's only particular to Mexico.
These things are responding
to transnational processes and drivers.
And the two that I see is, again, US demand for drugs
and the flooding of Mexico of US weapons since the end of drug control, gun control, sorry, in the 90s. And this is also not just
particular to Mexico. Like Haiti is flooded with American weapons as well. And that's had a huge
role in destabilizing that country. And then, well, we don't have to talk about that, but it creates the conditions and to justify certain forms of intervention.
So that's one of the big issues, I think, that is not treated in an honest way by people like
David Frum. And it does have, and it impacts everyday people in the US and it impacts everyday
people in Mexico. And as long as both countries don't find a way to collaborate on these issues
in a productive progressive way,
that deals with the structural causes and factors
as opposed to just policing and militarizing everything
that we're gonna continue to see what we see.
Massive amounts of death in Mexico
and massive amounts of overdose in the United States.
Yeah, and I think that like,
I think it was like maybe like Peter Del Scott
that said like there's three commodities globally
that just like oil, guns, and drugs
that like generally in the trading
and movement of those commodities
require massive amounts of like security
and who's going to, you know, and to do that, you have to be able to control
local politics.
And so who's on hand to do that?
Well, usually it's US intelligence, covert ops, and anti-communist forces, and that kind
of stuff.
So it's like, I think we would, I mean, surely that's even partially what we talked about.
Last time we had you on, we talked about Sicario, but it's even kind of partially partially what we talked about. Last time we had you on we talked about Sicario,
but it's even kind of partially what that movie's about.
Weirdly enough, I think Taylor started it, man.
He just swung and hit a foul ball
and I had to get on base for something.
With that one, I don't know.
Yeah, he also had tunnels in that one.
He did have tunnels in that one.
Tunnels are a big thing right now.
Yeah, and I think one of the things that Amlo tried to do, and will be interesting to see if
Shane Bomb continues, is Amlo, I mean, he kicked out the DEA. And he, in a way, he recognized the
limits of this militaristic approach to drugs and the kingpin strategy. And he made the argument
that the DEA was actually
exacerbating the violence as opposed to ending it.
So he kicked them out and the DEA hates his guts for that.
Now, that being said, he campaigned saying
that they were gonna end the militarization
of that conflict and he campaigned on something called
abrazos no balazos, like hugs, not bullets.
And they were gonna address the structural issues
that push young men,
particularly, to join these, to become the cannon fodder in these different drug trafficking
organization wars. But by and large, he's continued the approach of his predecessors.
And the Mexican military has become even more powerful. Now they're like operating ports,
they're running airports, they're running the Maya train, this mega project that was developed in the Yucatan. And I think that's a real issue.
That's a serious issue, more so for the people of Mexico than the people of the United States.
I think it's scary that he invited US special forces to come and train Mexican forces late
last year.
The very same US special forces unit that trained the group that and the Mexican Special Forces
that that deserted and formed the set this cartel in the late 90s early 2000s.
So it's so I'm like, that's not good.
We shouldn't be doing that.
Yeah, I know.
Can I ask you a question?
What's like to expand on that a little bit?
So what's the tension like between the military forces, the police, and this political party, Marana, because I mean, you know, if it's
a progressive reformist party, I'm pretty sure that like, you know, the cops in the
military are not, you know what I mean?
They hate the fucking guts, you know what I mean?
And maybe even don't want to see some of these reforms and these reforms go through.
Yeah, that's a really good question.
I mean, he, when Amno took office, he, I think he did believe that he was going to be able to implement
this different approach, this hugs not bullets approach.
But in certain parts of the country, I think the thinking was, well, we still have to send
the military in there to establish some sort of control.
And then that'll set the scene for socioeconomic programs and social welfare programs that
can help out the local communities
so people don't turn to joining these groups.
And then he also disbanded the federal police,
which was like thoroughly corrupt, right?
Like thoroughly corrupt.
The head of the federal police in the 2000s and 2010s,
Genaro Garcia Luna, was on the take
of the Sinaloa cartel the whole time.
And he's actually, I think he's,
I don't know, I can't remember if his court case ended
or he's awaiting sentencing right now in New York.
But once you go to these different localities
and you realize that political power is always in mesh,
it's always a mesh of like local landed elites,
local political elites, local narcos,
local police, local military garrisons,
it's a really thorny problem to deal with.
And instead of trying to unpack that and disentangle that,
that configuration of power at the local level,
he continued to rely on the military.
And he's become very close with the generals, right?
He's protected them from prosecution.
He's protected them from researchers like me
who are investigating the Mexican Dirty War of the 1970s. He's protected them from researchers like me who are investigating the Mexican dirty war the 1970s
He's protected them from the lawyers and the investigators of who are following up on the 2014. I'll see Napa case were 43
male college students
Trained to be teachers were disappeared
So it's you know
It's I think one of the contradictions of his project
That I think we continue we needictions of his project that I think
we continue, we need to highlight also the fact that he's handed them control over mega
projects like the Maya train, prevents them from any sort of, protects them from any sort
of transparency because it's deemed a national security interest.
And then that protects, that protects that project from, from transparency demands from
whether it's media or from whether you miss
from civil society.
But for me, it's like a really contradictory thing,
but it's also not something that begins with AMLO.
This militarization begins probably in the late 60s,
or even before.
The drug war in Mexico has been going
since the end of World War II, but it really ramped up in the 1960s. So there's long historical antecedents to these processes.
And that's going to be one of Shane Baum's challenges, right? Whether she's going to
continue this cozy relationship with the Mexican military, will the Mexican military continue to
increase its economic and political power, or whether they will be, you know, disciplined in some
sort of way.
I don't know.
It remains to me seen.
I think that the image that you just painted, like the portrait that you just made, seems
very much at odds with this statement from Frum's article, which as soon as I read it,
like the kill Bill sirens went off.
But he pointed to a statement made by Secretary of State Anthony Blinken last year
that the Mexican state is losing control of its national territory.
And it feels like this is very much like the gist of his whole article, basically, that like Mexico has gotten out of control and it's losing control of its national territory, which is like, like I said, just like what you just said, it's not a state that's losing control of it.
If anything, it's consolidating control of its national territory.
Yeah, I mean, or maybe not. I don't know. What do you think? No, I think I mean, that argument of Mexico becoming a failed state goes back
to like 2008, 2009, when like military officials in the US started to
place Mexico alongside Pakistan as potentially failed states.
Yeah.
And that was a particular moment because then President Felipe Calderon,
he's the one who in 2006 orders the military out of the barracks and unleashes
them on these different drug trafficking organizations.
And that's when you see the homicide levels like skyrocket, because the military is not
out there arresting people and then taking them to court.
Like they're just taking their right.
And everywhere the military gets sent into there's not a there's not a reduction of violence.
There's an exacerbation of violence. So by 2008-2009,
you had military officials writing like op-eds or writing little internal reports saying like,
is Mexico on the verge of becoming a failed state? It's kind of like Gordon Chang with China.
Gordon Chang has been saying since like the 90s that China's on the verge of collapsing.
I feel like this failed state argument with Mexico is one that is definitely going back to like 2008-2009. If we stretch it
even more, this goes back to like this late 70s, early 80s, except the fear then was that Mexico
was going to become another Iran. There was going to be another revolution in Mexico and that was
going to affect US oil supply. Mexican ayatollahs. We need Mexican ayatollahs. That would be so sick.
Well, that like Red Dawn is kind of is shaped by that moment, right? Where you have conservatives
and neocons making that argument that, you know, Cuba, the Sandinistas in Nicaragua,
and the Soviets were going to invade the U.S. through Mexico. Right. But they needed Mexico
to fall first. And if you watch Red Dawn, one of the title cards at the beginning is like, Mexico is
plunged into revolution.
And that's what allows the invasion of the US.
And honestly, I think that's like a long standing fear of a lot of this political or media class
in the United States.
Right.
Is this idea that it's, the one thing that I constantly come across reading these
op-eds throughout the 20th century is that the US-Mexico border is the US's
Maginot line and if we're not careful, if we're not bolstering the border in a
variety of different ways, then that's our soft underbelly and the US is gonna
fall that way. Right, because elites in the United States, they see Mexico and
Latin America as
almost like this is in our backyard, you know, as if to denote some kind of property or ownership,
you know what I mean? As if like this is our house and we can't have you guys fooling around and like
um and um you know fucking up our interests, right? So I mean like that's that's like that's
the that's the prime reason why they're so concerned, but it's just interesting.
You mentioned something earlier, Alex.
It's always when the swarthiest of the people, right, who are deemed the ones that are not
able to be in control of their own state or government, right?
Yeah, that's another through line that goes back to the early 1800s with John Quincy Adams
saying that democracy
was more fit for the fishes than for Latin Americans, right?
Like.
That is an insanely racist quote.
Holy shit.
I mean.
Yeah.
Go to like George Kennan.
If you really want,
see what George Kennan wrote about Latin America
after World War II.
I mean, since the Soviet era.
Cold War, yes.
It's, and the racism's never quite gone away.
I mean, that's why we have to step in.
Well, that's always usually been like the pretense too,
right, like security.
Just how many times that's invoked to intervene
in these various states.
Yeah, I mean, the other guy who,
thanks to the technology of audio recording, Nixon,
I mean, you should hear what Nixon says
about the Latin Americans, right? He's like, you know, Latin Americans can't are incapable of democracy. They're good
at autocracy, you know, but they're not good at democracy coming from Nixon of all people.
Yeah. But he has a hierarchy, right? So he talks about Africa first, like, no, no shot. Africans
have no shot at democracy or even governance. And then above that,
he says, well, Latin Americans can do authoritarianism, but not democracy. And
this is something that you know, so. So I think that's a through line. I think that the racism,
it's baked into the analytical and conceptual frameworks that people like David Frum used when
they try to understand Mexico and Latin America. They also, another thing is they don't want to have to think
about this region because as Aaron said, this is the backyard, although thank you, President Biden,
he upgraded us to the front yard. So, but they don't-
Seat at the table.
Yeah. When you get shot, you get shot trying to come into the front yard, not to the backyard.
But it's taken for granted that this is an American sphere of influence that should be
subject to US geopolitical interests.
Therefore, we don't have to worry about thinking about this region.
Let us go do what we do in the Middle East.
Let us go do our pivot to China.
But there should be no question
that Latin America and the Caribbean obviously belong to the quote unquote backyard. And
we don't want to even have to think about it. And they get really mad when they have
to think about it, whether it was the pink tide in the early 2000s or whether it's now
two consecutive presidential elections in Mexico, where you have, let's say a progressive
political party
winning, overwhelmingly winning democratic elections
to start to create some, recreate some form
of a welfare state that may, or probably will,
contradict with the economic and the geopolitical designs
of the United States.
Right, right.
You know, they've also just never forgiven Fidel Castro
for getting an insane amount of pussy
while thumbing his nose at the Empire.
Leaving illegitimate kids like Trudeau up in Canada.
Yeah, they've never forgiven that.
I mean, they've never forgiven Haiti, man.
Yeah, they've never forgiven.
I think about that a lot, man.
I think about that a lot, man. I think about that a lot, you know? Yeah, they never and I think, you know, and again, it's it's this
idea that the beacon, the city on the Shining Hill, the beacon
of civilization is the US and Latin America is supposed to
soak that up and learn from the US when the history actually
bears a relationship in reverse. Right? If we talk about like the
abolition of slavery, like the US US was third to last to get
rid of it, man. They're on the other end when it comes to radical or progressive ideas,
even though they want to think that they enshrine it. But yeah, I think it's in moments like
this during these elections in Mexico where you see some of the longstanding, polite racism that forms their conceptual and analytical
frameworks, it comes out. And when we see a democratic process
for them for people like from it's like, no, no, that's
authoritarianism. That's bad.
I know this is probably a broad question there. But, um, you
know, we're talking about Miranda's this progressive performance party. What, like, what kinds of, I guess, attempts are they going to make to sort of, I guess,
get themselves get Mexico out of this sort of neoliberal machine, you know, that it's
been in for the past, and I guess all of Latin America, the Caribbean for the past, like
how many of her years, like what steps is is is is shine bomb
going to take to kind of remove Mexico from that?
You know, I mean, that's I don't think it's possible, honestly.
I mean, even though like even though Amlo famously declared the death of neoliberalism, it's
obviously alive and well.
And this is a point of contention within the Mexican left in terms of how to categorize a morena's economic platform. Is it actually
anti neoliberal something on the left? Or is it just like, you know, Mexican capitalism
with a human face? And I think it's, I would probably fall, you know, totally just weasely
and weasely fashion, like somewhere in the middle, probably.
Right.
Because one of the reasons that Morena has become so popular is because they have managed
to make an immediate economic impact in the everyday lives of the vast majority of working
Mexicans.
So they did, I'm not did things like, you know, I think that triple the minimum wage
it had, it had the minimum wage in Mexico had lost power from like the late seventies,
all throughout the neoliberal era,
up until they took power in 2016, 2017.
So immediately, right?
People who are working for a minimum wage in Mexico
see an immediate improvement of their economic livelihood.
They also did things like they banned subcontracting.
So now workers who were forced to be really in an informal subcontracting. So now workers who were forced to be really
in an informal subcontracting role,
now the end of that allows them to be formal workers
and that entitles them to all sorts of social security
and welfare programs from the state.
There's been a reduction in extreme poverty.
There's been an increase in wages.
There's been all this within the context of zero
to maybe zero to minimal economic growth,
particularly because of COVID. So there's been there's these immensely popular cash transfer
programs where, you know, something like seven or every seven or eight, seven or eight of 10
Mexican families are somehow benefit from one of these cash transfer programs. Again, though,
this is one of these things being debated within the Mexican left one of these cash transfer programs. Again, though, this is one of
these things being debated within the Mexican left, whether these cash transfer programs are
neoliberal, or whether they harken back to a more developmentalist 20th century model of social
warfare. Whatever it is, people like my elderly family in Michoacán, they like those. They like
getting that cash, man. And so again, they made an immediate, important,
drastic improvement in the quality of life for the vast majority of Mexicans that had
been discarded or disregarded at least since the 1990s, probably before and during the
1980s during that last decade of neoliberal austerity. And the other, you know, so these
economic policies have made an impact.
Now, is that neoliberal or is that it's definitely not socialist?
It might be considered social democratic.
I think the other issue that might lead to that kind of elicits this discussion is
what to do with energy sovereignty.
So both AMLO and President-elect Sheinbaum talk a lot about energy sovereignty.
But this is in the context, again, of Mexican oil production has been declining for decades now.
Pemex, a state oil company, is losing money right there and investing tons of cash into it and not
getting much for it in return. So one of my hopes is that Sheinbaum as a climate, as an environmental
scientist, kind of builds on AMLO's nationalization of lithium
and starts to think about energy sovereignty,
not in relation to things like oil, but in renewables.
But to do it within the context of a nationalized framework
where the benefits go to the vast majority of Mexicans
and not to some private transnational company
that is in there to make a profit, not to provide clean, renewable, and cheap energy
for everyday Mexicans.
So it's an open question, man.
This is a really contentious point of debate
within the Mexican left in terms of
where on the political spectrum Morena's political,
economic, and social project exists.
And for me, it's,
project exists. And for me, based on what Shane Baum said in her inauguration speech, she says that she's looking forward to things like energy sovereignty, the revitalization of
a welfare state. I mean, so this hints at a more progressive, maybe social democratic approach to
some of the most pressing issues. But
there's, of course, there's a ton of contradictions, right? Amlo has got really chummy with most of the wealthiest men in Mexico, like Carlos Slim. So maybe he has this idea, like old mid 20th century
idea that he can work with the nationalistic progressive bourgeoisie of Mexico.
Right, the economic royalists, right?
Yeah.
Yeah.
So I mean, I think that's like a, he might have that idea and I wouldn't be surprised.
It's been a constant in parts of the Mexican left throughout the 20th century, but there
are definitely contradictions, right?
And the militarization aspect, the one that we talked about is one.
And another one that we can talk about is his approach to migration.
And that's another thing that I'm hoping that
Shane Baum kind of changes tack on, but we'll see.
Well, I mean, I'm glad you brought that up because it's another reason why I wanted to
have you on this week because this week Biden has released his long awaited, what would
you call it, executive order on the border that allows him to
essentially shut down parts of the border whenever a certain amount of asylum seekers have passed through the border.
I
just need to point out that this policy is essentially to the right of anything Trump was doing.
But I also need to just contrast it with several previous statements
that Biden has made in the past.
For example, November 22, 2019, Joe Biden said,
"'This election is about who we are and who we want to be.
"'I believe we are a nation that welcomes
"'those fleeing persecution and seeking asylum seeking asylum not a nation that turns her
back on them
He then he also said we must take urgent action to end Donald Trump's draconian
Immigration policies in my first hundred days. We will end his inhumane asylum policy
You see you know Terrence he had he had at least a billion more neurons then
He had at least a billion more neurons then at least
Like his brain wasn't yet like it was becoming aged tapioca, but now it's just swishing around his skull You know what I'm saying? Yeah
I mean
It's it's interesting that like if you read between the lines and I can't remember maybe from actually explicitly says it
but another reason why David from doesn't like omlo is
Because omla has signaled that he likes working with Trump more than he likes working with Biden
And I I don't know what to really make of that
I mean who knows but Trump from obviously hates Trump and it's a big part of the impetus here
but it definitely seems that
the Democrats and we've been saying this for months have co-opted some very interesting planks of
the
MAGA political world co-opted it went above and beyond
Yeah, I'll see and raise you
Yeah, I mean
What I guess what are we to make of this I saw one of your tweets Alex you
Had one of my favorite clips of scarface when they're like talking on the phone like organized crime like talking about Biden's new border patrol
Policy, and they're just like yes like the money printer is fucking
running man like i mean but like what are we truly like what are we to make of this um Biden's new
uh platform on the border is it a pivot is it something new um yeah i don't know what are we
to make of it this is a long-standing democratic tradition of when they get into trouble domestically,
they attack migrants.
I mean, it's happened at least since, let's say, since Clinton, right?
It's part of that triangulation, right?
So the Republicans will play up this issue that we're being invaded by, you know, you
can imagine, I'm not going to use your language, but we're being invaded by undocumented peoples, and American people
demand border security.
And the Democrats, instead of offering like a radically different, more actual, factual
approach or counter argument, they accept the premises and the terrain on which that
debate, that argument is being made by
the Republicans.
So they'll start to talk about things like border security.
And this has happened.
I know it's like the annoying historian thing to be like, well, there's a long story behind
this.
But like this has happened before.
It's just right now, it's, I think, based on the way that Democrats behave during the
Trump administration, right, like going to cages and crying and taking pictures of themselves crying and
tweeting about, you know, Kamala Harris tweeting about no one is illegal,
no human is illegal.
And then when she assumes power, she goes to Guatemala and says, like, do not come.
Right. Or it literally do not come.
Something like that, too.
Didn't she like go with like the like the pristine white like pants
That's the way
Holding the chain link fence and she's like crying
Or you know and then Kamala right like she's got like immigrant right links
Majorca's like the DHS guy. He's like
Cuban like kid of Cuban exiles man man. He's out there telling people, do not come.
So it's really, it's just the switch again, it's so obvious and it's so Trumpian, right?
Once again, this is just one more issue where there is no daylight between these two parties.
It's exactly the same thing that he's using.
Biden's using the same legal authority
to quote unquote shut down the border
that Trump did when he shut down the border
or when he did the Muslim ban.
Like they're using the same laws, the same logic,
the same reasoning.
It's just the Democrats sometimes use nicer language
and they will still pay homage in a really
Like just cynical way to that. We are a nation of immigrants, but not the ones of today
Well, I mean the ones from like decades ago
They would be the perfect this is something that we've talked about when it comes to to Palestine But they would be the ones to carry out these draconian
Immigration policies because like you said they can do
it with a nice face right?
They're Democrats, they're not Republicans you know.
They believe that no one is illegal.
So the foil blankets you know that migrants get are just going to be a little bit nicer
you know what I mean?
Yeah.
You know what I mean?
Yeah yeah all those yard signs that says in this house we believe those things are like
they're in the garage right now.
They've been taken out by now. They're gone.
And now it's interesting, man.
It's just seeing like, you know, Democrats, like so-called liberal Democrats posting like
crazy anti-immigrant shit, right?
And again, they don't learn the lesson.
You cannot use the same premises and the same logics and arguments that the
Republicans do. What you're supposed to do is advocate for something different.
And that's how you create political coalitions and majorities around this issue.
But instead, you're just giving them the same thing that the Republicans are
saying just in a lighter version, rhetorically, but materially, it's the
exact same thing. And Clinton did that shit.
Obama did that shit.
And now Biden's doing it.
There's a reason why, like, Obama's at the border in chief.
Right. Like they've all done this.
And now what is Biden going to be remembered for?
Closing the border, right.
Border Biden. So it's instead of being out front and there are members like I will be
I'll give credit to someone like Julian Castro, like Julian Castro and certain members of the Congressional Hispanic Caucus have come out really strongly against this. And I think they offer a different way out of this conundrum for Biden. But at this point, they're so freaked out about their polling that they're just gonna and because of Palestine and because of other issues that they're just gonna go, they're gonna just're going to just press the pedal and keep going with this shit. We've talked about it before, but it really does seem like this issue is
like kind of the lifeblood of this country, especially when it comes down to an election,
because it's almost like they have to reassure white people and Americans, right? And they're
quote Americans, right? They're never talking about like immigrants who actually live here, black and brown people, but it's to reassure them that, okay, we're stopping the
hordes at the gate, right? We can all unite and unify, right? Around this one issue because it's
a matter of existentialism. You know what I mean? And it's just, I mean, like you said, just the way
that they flip immediately, people that were a couple of years ago crying about kids in cages that are now
a threatening, threatening immigrants and saying well if you don't or saying to the left at least or progressives that well if you don't vote for Joe Biden then then what is Trump going to do
to all these migrants you know what I mean and this is happening right fucking now you know
so even in a hypothetical right even in a hypothetical, right? Even in a hypothetical, right?
Migrants are used as like kind of like a cudgel, you know?
Almost like a human shield.
Yeah, like a human shield.
Exactly.
Yeah, like, you know, it's just the same people who during Trump finally watched Alfonso Cuarón's
Children of Men and they're like, horrified, this is Trump.
And now they're advocating, like, that's why I keep referring to that that bill as a children of men
I know because like they're doing the same thing now like they're in and why because they're freaked out about an election
I mean, that's the crits. It's it's really it's it's upsetting man. Like it's it's it's
They it's acne
You know loony-toot shit. They fall for the same trick every time they were like on the third or fourth iteration of it now
They just turn up the racism bill the racism, you know button man the dial, you know, I mean
Well, what's crazy about it though is it's on even more like decayed and degenerated
assumptions than the previous iterations because
The reason they feel so threatened and vulnerable in the election is because they are presiding over a genocide
and they know it, but they can't, they either can't or won't or whatever, do anything to maneuver their way out of it.
And not only that, but the guy that would theoretically be able to get them out, he's in the pages of Time this week saying Hamas could end this tomorrow Hamas could say
Unintelligible and done period and but and the last offer Israel made was generous in terms of I don't
Anyway, can I just say something real quick dog?
Can I tell you how how how insane this country is or the media classes?
I mean the entire country
But when somebody says something that you don't understand and you're interviewing them what you
usually do is ask them to fucking repeat themselves bro if this is such an
important issue but because this is a foregone conclusion it doesn't matter
what the fuck he says he could read off in the back of a bubblegum rapper dog
and it would be fine if they would print that shit you know I'm saying so what
kind of fucking democracy is it when you can't challenge the king right there that that
whole article I don't know if you guys read this I couldn't read it dude I
felt like I was like like it was hard to read that shit it's incoherent in a way that's like I
mean I don't know there's so many different things he says like when he
talks about like Macron's brain drain thing like he's I don't know if you guys like say there's like so many weird tangents it's
like it what it is it's a fascinating like anatomy of how a degenerating brain
functions because you can see that he grabs phrases and words and stuff from
his environment and then just tries to like pack it all in like water to see
dog it's like trying to hold water.
He was also like really ornery, right?
Like he was like, to go back to Tony Montana,
he was like, I built this, you know?
Like he was like, I don't get credit for this.
I did this, I did this.
And then it'll be like in parentheses, unintelligible.
That happened like a couple of times.
It's like, what are you saying?
Oh yeah, it was weird. It was hard to read. It was,
the whole thing he was trying to distinguish between like values based and practical base
policy was like just, yeah, yeah, I don't, and now he can't find a chair to sit in.
Like, is it, it's weird, you know, it's, yeah, it's just, we still have, you know, 800 military bases around the world, but like
it's there's there's a decline going on.
And yeah, it's embodied in him.
It's embodied in Trump.
It's embodied against that other guy who's got brain worms.
It's like the perfect comment, man.
And and this is why I get mad at David from when he's talking shit about the Mexican elections
where you had, you know, two women running and a guy in his thirties. Right.
Right.
Like we have we have two guys over 80s and one who's a convicted felon now.
So it's like one guy who's committing crimes against humanity.
Right.
One guy who has a worm in his brain.
One guy who's got a worm in his fucking brain.
Really cool falconry contest though.
I almost wanted to apply just to see if I win a day of falconry with
He does falconry you didn't see that no, that's actually
He's he's a fucking rapscallion he's like, you know what I mean, he's
swashbuckler
swashbuckler a swashbuckler Politics strange. It's I guess where I'm going with all that
It's like I guess I find it what I find so interesting about it and they even mention it in that Harper's article that I
Mentioned earlier we're at there at this Munich conference and all these
there's a very there's a very fascinating irony going on because
there's a very fascinating irony going on because
For the past 40 years 50 years 60 years really since the end of World War two the atlantisist ideology has basically been like
America runs the show We're gonna build Germany up through
Light manufacturing, but they can't rear or anything like that
But they're going to be the fiscal backstop of Europe
What that meant in the context of the ukraine-russia war was like all right you all got to fucking get in line
Germany says it's gonna be energy independent on Russia energy, but like no more. It's gonna buy American energy and
You are out of your mind if you think you can rear the rest of Europe
Basically they go to these conferences and they say you have to pay your fair share to Ukraine so that it can fight Russia
But we can't do that anymore because the border we can't because what's going on at the border and so you get this like
fascinating
examination of how
America's kind of spread thin but like not really like it does Janet Yellen is correct Like we do have the quote-unquote money for two three four wars, but like
Ideologically and karmically we just don't he going on
Extended we're over
Yes, and so and you see that like you see those
Constraints coming in into tension with each other in this very fascinating way that you mentioned it earlier, like if you've got like Red Dawn
and like the fear is that like, oh, Soviet Union's invading through Mexico
well now we have this weird degraded version of that where we're fighting like
these residual battles left over from the
the end of the Cold War and it comes into conflict with our you know
like border policy that like it's it's it's like it's like Red Dawn
recapitulated but like I said on extremely degenerated well wasn't
wasn't there wasn't there that that shit going around about Hamas Hamas fighters
coming through tunnels in Mexico that the cartel had using shit like that coming across the border
Watch the first two minutes of Sicario 2
Blows himself up. Yeah
Like Lubbock, Texas. Yeah
Repping the prophet Taylor Sheridan foretold all this that's a terrible movie
Know what Tom like references while those have Sabala this book this is a scholar
The cartels do not exist. He just published a really good article in
Baffler in these times where he talks about these we talked about tunnels and this argument that was made like in the late 2000s
That the Mexican narcos had learned tunnel technology from Hamas.
Oh my god.
And Hezbollah and that they had been they had sent militants to Mexico to teach them how to do tunnels.
That's a perfect union. That's a perfect holy union of both of their deranged fears, right?
Well, it's also just emblematic that the fruit of Islam still exists in the Latin world vis-a-vis the Moors, you know.
Alan DeLuz lives, man.
Yeah, that's right.
They're going to win the Battle of Covalonga this time.
That's right.
Also remember the border bill, the way they kept presenting it in Congress was to link Israel, Ukraine and the border.
And I thought that was really illustrative.
It really, I think, showed everyday Americans what was at stake and hopefully to get them to think
about why these three things were linked just beyond
like legislative budgetary procedures.
Because I think the Biden people all saw them
as interconnected and linked.
I think it's obvious and that's the way they've acted.
But the thing about Biden with the shutting down the border
is that usually what Democrats do is that they on the one,
it's like the carrot and the stick, they'll say, OK, the stick, we're
going to do border enforcement.
We're going to like build more, you know, walls on the border made out of helicopter
landing pads used in Vietnam like Clinton did or Obama did like the Dreamer Act
at the same time that he deported three million people.
Biden is not offering the carrot. Right.
Biden is just offering we're shutting down the border.
We are violating American law
on asylum and we're violating international law on asylum. So you have this internal contradiction
where they're going against their own laws to do what? To implement a policy that one, according to
most expert is impractical. They can't do it. You can't shut down the border. What you're going to
do is you're going to make you're actually gonna create more undocumented migration because people still wanna come.
And if you're shutting down legal avenues for that,
then people are going to find a way to come illegally.
And who loves that?
Well, that was the tweet that you mentioned, Terrence.
The people who, the criminal organizations
who control the smuggling, they're gonna love that.
They're gonna make more money.
They can charge more money.
And they're the ones who are gonna profit off of this
It's a similar dynamic also with drugs with drug prohibition, right?
Like you you you make these things these commodities illegal
Well, the people who benefit from that then are the people who are smuggling them in right?
They can charge more and they're still making a ton of money off of it. I think you hit on something that's very interesting, which is that the Democrats have stopped offering the carrot.
In the few instances that they have,
like in Gaza, the pier, it's fucking just detached
and floated off into the ocean.
It's just like they-
Yeah, soggy ass baby care is what they offer, bro.
They soggy ass baby care.
It's so fucking sad.
They're just like, I don't know. I hate to even laugh
Did you guys see the Department of Defense tweet today though?
They were bragging about how the pier was going to actually result in cost savings
dude
I read it and I'm like this cannot be the official Department of Defense account and I clicked on it. Nope
Sure enough. It was the actual Department of Defense account. What's crazy is all these things just keep in that time interview
Biden said two insane things first of all
Hamas can just end this tomorrow if they unintelligible, which is like, okay
Okay, that's you talking about? There's no answer there. Okay, that's insane. Second of all, he literally said in an interview,
the United States does not recognize
the International Criminal Court.
Like that's, I mean, like, yes, we all know that.
That sounds like something Trump would say, bro.
You know what I mean?
Like that literally sounds like something that he would say.
Well, I think he got the name of Claudia shame shame
bomb right when he called her though at least he didn't call like call like
president Alcisi or something that was bit is your boo toe my old friend is
here but is your boot oh she's back president Godawfi is
Yeah, but we're going to see, you know, the reason why we've had rap, like drastically reduced what they call encounters of migrants at the at the US Mexico border is because
Mexico is doing the dirty work of the US and the past three, four months, right? So they've
been using their National Guard that was established by AmLO to essentially play a migratory police.
And they're not allowing migrants
to get to the US-Mexico border.
They're using checkpoints, they're using raids,
and they're kind of keeping them away.
They're doing the bidding of Biden,
which is what AMLO also did with Trump.
They had some sort of informal arrangement
to control migratory flows.
And as long as AMLO did that,
then Trump would try not to interfere with
internal affairs. I think that's the same arrangement that Biden had with Amlo. And
we'll see if it continues with Shane Baum. I hope, I mean, she has a different political style. She
has a different outlook on some of these things. And I hope that's another thing, in addition to
energy and the environment. I hope she provides a rethinking of this policy because the US empire generates
all of its own contradictions and one of its own big contradictions, its migrants and asylum
seekers, right?
Like these people are coming mostly from Haiti, from Cuba, from Venezuela.
Cuba and Venezuela are under horrific sanctions.
So what are people going to do?
Where are they going to flee? Where are they going to flee?
Where are they going to come to?
To the United States, the place that generated the misery
that denied them of the right to stay home.
Because that's another thing.
It's not just that refugees have a right to stay here, to come here.
They do, according to U.S. law and international law.
But what U.S. empire has always violated in the Caribbean and Latin America
is people's right to stay home.
People don't want to leave their homes in their communities.
They do it out of necessity.
Right.
So as long as Americans, both political parties act like these migrants miraculously
appear into existence on the U S Mexico border, then we're going to have, we're
going to see a replay of this bullshit over and over again, instead of thinking
about how U S empire in Latin America and the Caribbean
is generating the very people
that they don't want to come to this country.
Right, and you know what?
Last thing I'll say too, I'm thinking,
I think a lot about climate change, right?
And people having to leave, right?
And the fact that the United States,
as like the largest, one of the largest exp largest exporters right of all this fucking filth man
And forcing people to leave their homes, right and then being told that they're not allowed in right, you know
It's just you know, a lot of the times I just think about like, you know
Not even to be funny really but just a situation in which there are climate refugees trying to leave the United States
You know in trying to go to countries that they've, you know, that they've essentially
Isn't it true that more people are trying to get into Mexico than the other way around? I think I'm not sure.
I did see that AMLO like kicked out a bunch of Americans because they didn't have papers last week or two weeks ago. I know. But there's, there's, there's a how the tables have turned. Yeah.
What is that movie, apocalyptic movie where there's climate change and Americans have
to go into Mexico and Mexico doesn't let them in.
The day after tomorrow.
The day after tomorrow.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I watched that movie on a bus in Mitrocan in December when a lot of migrants from the
U.S. go to Mexico to celebrate Christmas, the holidays. And when that scene flashed up on the bus TV screen, man, the clapping, the whole bus.
Yeah, yeah, it's our turn now.
But yeah, Aaron, the climate, this is the most, according to a lot of experts, we're
in a moment of, in modern history, this is the most mass
movement and mass displacement that we've seen. And obviously a lot of it has to do with climate
change. So how are our global North countries going to react? And we're really at one of these
socialism or barbarism moments. And we see this being played out, whether it's the Mediterranean
Sea, whether it's the US-Mexico border, we're seeing this play out and the barbaric, you know, the barbaric elites seem
to be winning, right?
And this is why the president of Colombia, Pet Gustavo Petro keeps making that link between
climate catastrophe and climate induced movement with what's being done to Palestinians in
Gaza.
Like he sees it as same as he sees Gaza dress rehearsal for the future.
Right. And he says, you know, and he has this line where he says it's because
because middle class Americans and Europeans have allowed Nazis into their
homes and now they're acting like Nazis when it comes to dealing with migrants
and refugees. And so I think this is going to be.
It's going to be one of the main struggles that we'll see in the upcoming
decades. Right. And what Biden just announced is it's it's not going to be one of the main struggles that we'll see in the upcoming decades.
What Biden just announced is it's not going to work.
What it will do is increase the barbarism, the brutalization, and the type of brutality
that's become normalized against migrants or even called for by certain segments of
the American population.
Yeah.
Well, I think that's a good spot to end it. called for by certain segments of the American population. Yeah. Yeah.
Well, I think that's a good spot to end it.
I think that in many ways, it is a supplement
to the previous time we had you on.
I feel like these were the themes we were definitely
working towards.
That's on our Patreon.
If people would like to go check that out,
we encourage you to go check that out.
That was from like February or
Of this year. It's when we had you on Alex. Yeah something like it was earlier this year
So, um, but I like the title you guys came up with I like it. What was the title?
Is the gringo heart of darkness
Yeah, that was a lot from Alex. That was great.
That was a great title.
I laughed when I saw that.
That was so good.
We did go there.
So please go check that out on our Patreon.
Alex, do you have anything you want to plug?
If people would like to find you, find your writing or anything, please tell us how to do that.
Yeah, I'm on Twitter, X, whatever it's called, Alexander underscore Avina.
I'm working on an article for foreign exchanges now talking about Mexico and the Mexican elections
and what we can expect or look forward to.
I kind of, you know, practice some of my ideas on you guys today in terms of what I ideally
what I would love President Schoenbaum to do when she assumes office in October of later this year.
But she's got this, you know, she's got a huge democratic mandate and we'll see what she does with it.
The final thing I mentioned, I forgot to mention, is I hope she takes more of a stand on what's going on in Palestine.
AMLO has maintained a stance of neutrality while calling for a ceasefire and peace.
And Mexico did join the ICJ case on the side of South Africa, but
it would be really powerful, right? Because she is a secular Jew who has in the past made
some comments supportive of the right of Palestine to self-determination, right? So
it'll be interesting to see what kind of stance she takes on that.
So it'll be interesting to see what kind of stance she takes on that.
Absolutely.
We'll be on the lookout for all that.
Go check out Alex on Twitter.
And we'll have to have you back on pretty soon again.
Anytime man, this was fun.
Thanks a lot, anytime.
Thanks again Alex.
We'll see you next time.
Thanks. The So Thank you.